health care reform in the netherlands · in european health systems . croatia . serbia . ......
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HEALTH CARE REFORM IN THE NETHERLANDS
Gelle Klein Ikkink Director of Health Insurance Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport
Austria
Sweden
Spain
Slovakia
Portugal Italy
Germany
Great-Britain
Malta
Luxemburg
Lithuania
Latvia
Poland
Ireland
Holland
Greece
France
Finnland
Estonia
Denmark
Czech Republic
Ciprus
Belgium
Single purchaser
Regional, but functionally single purchaser
Non-competing multiple purchaser
Slovenia Hungary
Romania
Bulgaria
Single, multiple and competing purchasers in European health systems
Croatia
Serbia
Bosnia
FYRM ALB
Switzerland
Competing purchaser
Key elements of reform debate 1.Who is the prudent buyer of care on behalf on
the consumer? 2.Yes/No competition among:
• Providers of care? • Sickness funds / insurers?
3.Which benefits package? 4.Which premium structure?
How to build a sustainable health care system
• Fair share of solidarity
• High responsiveness to change
• Efficiency seeking
Goal
• 16 million inhabitants
• 100 hospitals
• 16000 medical specialists
• 8000 general practitioners
• 21 insurance companies
• € 60 billion spent on health
care = 10% GDP
Characteristics of the Dutch Health Care system • Tradition of private initiative
Hospitals, nursery homes are privately owned Medical specialists and general practitioners are mostly private entrepreneurs
• Former health insurance system
60% social insurance (below average income level) 30% private insurance (no government interference) 10% civil servants, elderly etc.
• Growing government interference (from ± 1980 onwards)
Main objective: cost containment Detailed price regulation, budgeting National & regional planning & licensing
Pros & cons of the former system • Pros
Cost containment on macro (national) level Policy implementation through intervening in the system Quality (of health care delivery)
• Cons
Macro efficiency, micro inefficiency Lack of spirit of enterprise & innovative climate Rationing → waiting lists
• Growing pressure on the system Demographics (ageing & labor market) Technology developments Law suits
Insurers Providers
Consumers
Increasing pressure on the system by: growing wealth, advancing medical technology and aging population.
Reasons for reform Unexpected
financial effects around income
threshold
Fragmented insurance market
Different rules of market
game
Lack of cost consciousness
- Lack of efficiency - Lack of innovation - Waiting lists
Lack of transparency
Solution: less central regulation and stronger competition
Means and ends
More room to move (choice, invest, contract)
Decentralized responsibilities (duty of care, duty to insure)
Health care meets demands Price meets performance
Innovation Entrepreneurship
Purchasing health care
Not by insurance alone.. • Room to move
Freedom of contracting (insurer ↔ health care provider) Freedom of price negotiations (2009: 34% of hospital care) Freedom of capital investments (capital costs in DRG’s)
• Incentives & responsibilities From budgeting to output pricing / p4p Insurers & providers have to compete for clients Quality indicators for hospital and outpatient care Increase amount of risk of insurers and providers Duty of care for health insurers
Not by insurance alone (2)
Government safeguards: Accessibility (of health care delivery & insurance) Affordability (of health care delivery & insurance) Quality (of health care delivery) Health Care Inspectorate (quality of care) Health Care Authority (market development, price regulation) Health Insurance Board (package of entitlements, risk equalization)
Public Insurance Civil servants
Private insurance (1/3)
Sickness funds (2/3)
Health Insurance
Act
• Compulsory insurance (consumers) • Open enrolment (insurer) • Legally defined coverage (insurer) • No premium differentiation (insurer) • Submission to risk adjustment (insurer) • Income related contribution (consumer)
• Compulsory deductible (consumers) • Free to set nominal premium (insurer) • Free to offer different policies (insurer) • Free to offer suppl. deductible (insurer) • Free to engage group contracts (insurer)
The insurance reform 2006
Managed competition
Equity
Efficiency
Compartments of the social insurance system
• General Practitioners • Hospitals • Drugs • Equip / Transp.
appr. € 33 billion
Health Insurance
Act
“Cure”
appr. € 23 billion
Long Term Care Act
• LT care elderly • Chronically ill • Disabled • LT Mentally ill
“Care”
Social support act
appr 3 € billion
Supple- mental Health-
insurance
appr. € 5 billion
• Paramedics • Dental care • Alternative medicine
• Home care • Transportation • Support in partici- pation in society
Risk equalization system
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
7000
8000
Person A Person B
Estimated costs Contribution RES
premium
premium
In €’s / yr
Age / gender
Type income
SES
Region
Pharm Cost Group
Diagn Cost Group
Total pred. costs
Ministy of Health, Welfare and Sports The risk equalization system
Women, 40, disability allowance, low SES, urban area, PCG:
Diab. type I, DCG: none
€ 1231
€ 1003
€ 83
€ 46
€ 3327
-/- € 113
€ 5577
Man, 38 , employed, high SES, prosperous region, PCG: none,
DCG: none
€ 980
-/- € 54
-/- € 98
-/- € 79
-/- € 347
-/- € 113
€ 289
Base premium
Comp deductible
Contr.from RAF
-/- € 947
-/- € 155
€ 4485
-/- € 947
-/- € 71
-/- € 729
Government healthcare allowance
state disbursement
Employers compulsory allowance i.r.c Risk
adjustment fund
income related contribution
(= 50% of healtcare consumption)
Consumers
Health Insurers
Care providers
Cost cov. & Profit
healthcare consumption
Ministy of Health, Welfare and Sports The flow of funds
appr. € 33 billion
Competition on insurance market • 2006: nearly 20% switched • 2010: app. 4.5% (“just enough”) • Fierce competition, particularly on premium • Cumulated losses 2006-2007 500 mln €,
small earnings now. • People satisfied with their insurer (between 7 & 8 out of
10) • Product differentiation below desired level
(modest initiatives on preferred providers) • Four insurance companies have almost 90% of the
market (“just enough”)
Mergers of insurance companies
0,0x 0,2x 0,4x 0,6x 0,8x 1,0x
Achmea-Agis UVIT CZ-Delta Lloyd Menzis
Z&Z
ONVZ DSW Friesland
Fortis
Salland
Niche-player / candidate for take-over?
Three big Big three In the middle
Relative market share (market leader = 1) = 1.5 mln insured
Source: Atos
“4 is few, 6 is many”
2006 (2)
2007 (2)
2008 2009 2010
Estimated premium according to National Budget (1)
1106 1166 1105 1124 1123
Average nominal premium paid by citizens (1)
1061 1146 1094 1104 1147
Highest 1140 1224 1161 1205 1211
Lowest 964 1056 975 963 996 Bandwith 176 168 186 242 215 (1) Estimate and nominal premium without collectivity deduction (2) 2006 & 2007 incl. no-claim premium (91 euro)
Development estimate and actual premium
Performance of the new system
• Take off: with caution • There is more space available than used until now Explanation: • Shortcomings in incentive structure • Government oriented → self oriented →
each other oriented → future oriented • Period of incubation, trust building, management of expectations • In order to become trusted 3rd party, insurance companies have
to invest in personnel, knowledge systems, contracting skills • Not very much between claustrophobia and agoraphobia..
So far, so good (..?)
• Initiatives managed care, DRG contracting • More focus on prevention • Substantial steps in increasing risk providers and
insurers • Collective schemes for chronic conditions • Impressive results on preference policy
pharmaceuticals (generics) • More relaxed attitude on preferred providers • Quality awareness moving upwards • Patient channeling with refund of compulsory excess
License to operate, spring 2010 • Spring 2010 • Financial crisis • Taskforce on Health Care to save 20% • Conclusion: the system is “stuck in the middle” • Old an new mechanisms counteracting • Move either ahead or backwards, or you will
have the “worst of both worlds” • License to operate for insurance companies is expiring: • What value is added? Anyone could pay the bills. • Get out of the comfort zone!
31 + 21 + (24) = (76)
Coalition agreement (30/09/10) • Move ahead!
- increase free pricing - increase amount of risk bearing - allow for private capital
• Health care is only sector with significant growth • Integrated care delivery nearby • Coverage shrinking (lower disease burden) • More copayments • Long term care to be carried out by health insurers
(presently by regional offices) • Establish Health Care Quality Institute
CZ initiative breast cancer • 4 hospitals will no longer contracted:
do not live up to “CZ”standards • 45 `so so` • 44 ok or better
• “Unnecessary” • “Inaccurate” • “Teamwork over volume”
• Court ruling: CZ may proceed • Oncologist society: 33-50% of hospitals should stop cancer
treatments
• Improve quality transparency & measurement • Increase risk insurers: less ex-post corrections RES • Limit free rider behaviour: defaulters and uninsured • Encourage insurance companies
- to play their role as health care contractors - to feel responsibility for quality, price ánd volume
• Keep the coverage of the health insurance “lean and mean”: the necessary health care, but not more than that
• Intensify relationship between social security (i.e. employers, reintegration of employees & health care / health insurance
Still a long way to go: challenges
… even longer • Stimulate Disease Management Programs, Stepped
Care, selfmanagement, e-health • Promote shifting from secondary to primary care and
from primary care to self-management and prevention (DMP’s, Stepped Care)
• It’s the EMD stupid! • Discourage the “everybody does everything” in
hospitals, concentrate specialized low volume health care
• Strengthen role and rights of patients as driving force in the system
Dangerous rocks… • Narrow political margins: government with minimal
majority in parliament, limits change capacity • Affordability under pressure: accumulating effects of
more co-payments, higher premiums and shrinking of legal coverage
• Risk of conservation of the status quo. Everyone wants change, but all in a different direction. The status quo is everybody’s second choice.
• Waterbed: when you press down in one spot, it moves up somewhere else: supply induced demand.
.. but quite a strong undercurrent! • In a grown up system of managed competition government
has only two instruments for macro cost containment: - shrinking of the benefit package (insurance coverage) - increasing level of co-payments
• If you want to avoid those, put you energy in an system that discourages over- en undertreatment (only “appropriate care”): there is a lot of unnecessary and costly variation out there !
• Therefore you will need: - (clinical) guidelines: what is the prevailing standard - (financial) incentives that stimulate guideline compliance - (market) interests in enforcing efficient behaviour - (up to date) performance measurement (feed back)
You always get what you pay for
First: : Availability Then: : Waiting lists Now : Production Later : Health outcomes
now
1990 2000 2010
How to approach
• Clear clinical guidelines, indication criteria = > watchfull waiting • No compliance => no reimbursement
• Informed consent
=> shared decision making
• Outcome measurement
=> public assignment?
Defaulters & uninsured Both: 1.5% (240.000 each) Defaulters • Large portion didn’t pay as from 2006 (Σ 4000 €) • Due to yearly open enrollment: merry-go-round along insurers • 2007: ban on canceling policies • 2009: withholding 130% nominal premium on income source Uninsured • Comparable approach from 2011 You need public enforcement to sustain a private system….
Lack of personnel in healthcare;
Han Middelplaats Head of Unit Labour Market Policy
Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport
2. Contents Analysis of Developments in Demand for Care and in the Labour Market Role of the government Possible Solutions Innovation Policy
3. Developments
Aging and other demographics Medical-technological Developments Social-cultural Developments Productivity Gap
Healthcare becomes more costly Increasing demand
Public finance under pressure Solidarity under pressure Increasing need for healthcare workers
4. Long-term Bottlenecks in the Labour Market
+480,000
+250,000
0 200000 400000 600000
Growth of employment
opportunities in care sector
Growth of labour supply
in the Netherlands
5. Short-term Bottlenecks for nursing personnel
0%
2%
4%
6%
8%
10%
12%
14%
2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Verpleging (4+ 5) Verzorging (3) Zorghulp en Helpenden
Sociaalagogisch (5) Sociaalagogisch (3+ 4)
6. The Future?
7. Differing Roles within the Labour Market
Primary responsibility lies with employers who are in a dialogue with ‘social
partners’ such as trade unions. The government is responsible for the system as a whole guarantying
accessible, good quality and affordable healthcare.
8 The role of the Government Active: Sufficient training and traineeship opportunities Taking responsibilities within the field itself into account by:
Stimulating; Putting the subject on the national agenda; And encouraging and showcasing best practices regarding employment policy in health care.
9. Classic Solutions Investing in current personnel
Horizontal and vertical mobility of personnel within the sector Supplementation of part-time contracts Life faze conscious employment policy Professionalisation
Increasing the inflow of new personnel Creation of an traineeship fund Increased cooperation between care facilities, educational institutions and municipalities Investing in those with less education and in women who come from somewhere other than the Netherlands Information and selection before beginning training
10. Training and traineeship
An traineeship fund is being created to improve: (Training yield; Professional gains; Sector yield)
More financial room fo traineeship in healthcare facilities Stimulating regional cooperation between care facilities and educational
institutions
11. Mathematics exercise Part-timers who work 2 hours longer = 75.000 Older employees retire one year later = 25.000 Share in labour market 14>16% = 175.000 Increasing productivity by .5% per year = 115.000 Self-supporting care = 90.000 Total = 480.000
12. innovation policy In order to solve the problem it is not only necessary to invest in current
employees and attract new ones. We also have to think about: Innovative care processes An Innovationplatform Experimentation policy Labour-saving devices Increasing work productivity Increasing self-sufficiency of care seekers
13 Experiment Policy The core aim of the policy is to remove perceived obstacles in legislation which
impede innovation. Support the invention and implementation of innovations in healthcare Scrap rules and regulations where necessary
14. Conclusions Innovation Training The Ministry of Health will also facilitate discussion between all parties who
have a stake in solving this problem.